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FATF’s regional body retains Pak on ‘enhanced follow-up’ status

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The Asia Pacific Group (APG) on Money Laundering, a regional affiliate of FATF, has retained Pakistan on “enhanced follow-up” status for sufficient outstandin­g requiremen­ts, while improving the country’s rating on 21 of the 40 technical recommenda­tions of the global watchdog against money laundering and terror financing.

Pakistan was put on the grey list by the Paris-based Financial Action Task Force (FATF) in June 2018 and the country has been struggling to come out of it. The second Follow-Up Report (FUR) on Mutual Evaluation of Pakistan released by the APG also downgraded the country on one criteria. The report said Pakistan was re-rated to ‘compliant’ status on five counts and on 15 others to ‘largely compliant’ and on yet another count to ‘partially compliant’.

According to Dawn newspaper, Pakistan is now fully ‘compliant’ with seven recommenda­tions and ‘largely compliant’ with 24 others. The country is ‘partially compliant’ with seven recommenda­tions and ‘non-compliant’ with two out of a total 40 recommenda­tions. All in all, Pakistan is now compliant or largely compliant with 31 out of 40 FATF recommenda­tions. The reporting date for this evaluation was October 1, 2020, which means Islamabad may have made further progress since then that would be evaluated at a later stage.

“Pakistan will move from enhanced (expedited) to enhanced follow-up, and will continue to report back to the APG on progress to strengthen its implementa­tion of anti-money laundering and combating financing terror (AML/CFT) measures,” the APG said. Pakistan submitted its third progress report in February 2021 which is yet to be evaluated. “Overall, Pakistan has made notable progress in addressing the technical compliance deficienci­es identified in its Mutual Evaluation Report (MER) and has been re-rated on 22 recommenda­tions,” the APG added.

In the first FUR of February last year, Pakistan’s progress was largely found unchanged non-compliant on four counts, partially compliant on 25 counts and largely compliant on nine recommenda­tions. Since then, the government worked aggressive­ly and improved its effectiven­ess on the AML/CFT system. Minister for Energy Hammad Azhar, who is also head of the task force on FATF, welcomed the re-rating, saying the results proved the sincerity along with resolve of the government in complying with the FATF requiremen­ts.

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